club662
club662
club662

a LITTLE different?

There's a difference between not (yet) describing something and the inability to describe something because it's physically impossible.

no, according to my logic, pi has a finite number of decimals.

nope, but it's hard to prove a number exists if you can't describe it.

But there is a finite space in our universe to 'write' them on.

but when you write them in such a manner you a) store bits of data on the paper, b) use the largest describable form on those bits. Which is still what i am suggesting.

If our universe is finite, wouldn't the largest number describable be the maximum number we can store in this finite universe? If you would take every smallest particle in the universe and set it to the largest number it can describe, at some point you can't describe or add another digit in that number. Theoretically

Forget about the device, i'm stuck on how tasty this cake looks. Anonye any idea what it's called (if it's some 'standard' cake at all...)?

A fish called wanda? LOL, awesome!

I actually end up using "5. A serial cable" a lot while experimenting with electronics and the arduino. Not a useless cable at all!

Do you have a link to this theory?

This is some really bad news, immediately after a reboot that a 1TB drive has died on me :(

Next: scraping off all the match-heads from a box of matches and generating a somewhat larger version of the rocket.

Microsoft and innovation in one sentence? Not yet.

I dunno, it's just a tablet with a smart keyboard. I'll have to first see how well the tablet performs to get an idea of how 'obselete' it makes the ipad or air.

Don't get me wrong i agree with you completely, the reason why i find this awkward, is that amazon, in this case, is not the 'market' the writers/publishers are. By fixing their prices in their model, they are doing exactly the same (in a larger scale) as the separate publisher are getting prosecuted for. Only by

Actually, i would argue that's a false logic, the price in itself is not the competition. It's of course the fact that companies are put against each other to diversify prices/services (and in the process improve efficiency, knowledge and technology) which is the real profit for the consumer.

The sad part is, if i understand correctly, that a faulty U.S. law is now basically going to mess it up for the entire world....but i'm afraid the judges don't care/understand...

So wait, publishers are being punished for agreeing on a price (let's say 10% of all books are affected), in favor of amazon affecting 90% of ebooks effectively setting a fixed price for all?